Webelos Scouts that earn the Wildlife Conservation Belt
Loop while a Webelos Scout
also satisfy requirement 13 for the
Naturalist Activity Badge.

Requirements

Tiger Cubs, Cub Scouts, and Webelos Scouts may complete requirements in a
family, den, pack, school, or community environment. Tiger Cubs must work with
their parents or adult partners. Parents and partners do not earn loops or pins.

Belt Loop

Complete these three requirements:

Explain what natural resources are and why it's important to protect
and conserve them.

Make a poster that shows and explains the food chain. Describe to your
den what happens if the food chain becomes broken or damaged.

Learn about an endangered species. Make a report to your den that includes
a picture, how the species came to be endangered, and what is being done
to save it.

Academics
Pin

Earn the
Wildlife Conservation belt loop, and
complete
five of the following
requirements:

Visit a wildlife sanctuary, nature center, or fish hatchery.

Collect and read five newspaper or magazine articles that discuss
conservation of wildlife and report to your family or den what you learn.

Learn about five animals that use camouflage to protect themselves.
Tell your den or an adult family member what you learned.

Make a birdbath and keep a record for one week of the different
birds that visit it.

Make a collage of animals that are in the same class: fish, amphibians,
reptiles, birds, or mammals.

Make a plaster cast of an animal track. Show it to your den.

With your parent or adult partner, visit with a person who works
in wildlife conservation, such as a park ranger, biologist, range manager,
geologist, horticulturist, zookeeper, fishery technician, or conservation
officer.

Visit a state park or national park.

Participate in an environmental service project that helps maintain
habitat for wildlife, such as cleaning up an area or planting trees.

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